100 ./tíf:: ': i,.. ;::: Ii 7 r . .'- ...; it..... ' .,.:;;."J. "A J ' . , ' 1\ << ',. .:,.,\....:, ;: if' ttt:h ' !Jt:: ï;i:;Jicat:! , J.':::::i :'.....:. ..:;:' , ': .,, \ . \:dJ;. '.:; : :: : .. ' }. "" I ' *:'" ...... ..,........:' ..:..' ;. ., :::;,.< " .: f:.:i', ' " ' ,,', ;.. '-':: ::::::::. . ,;:- . :: .t..::,::" t..atm .. French ,....Iê Canadian . MONTREAL. . . City of old- world French cuisine and new-world air-conditioning . . . Modern office buildings sprung up be ide Notre- Dame Church and.. in their shadows, ancient convents as old as the white nlan's America . . . A modern port.. almost as great as New York's, a thou- sand miles from the sea, its teelning docks abutting 011 the cobbled streets of Maisonneuve's day . . . Museulus that hold the relics of Indian days. . . and, from the top of i\lount Royal, neon signs 'inking in the distance. That s Montréal, North America's great city of contrasts, its most intriguing and charming metropolis, where the cop on the corner calls you M'sieu or Madame and directs you to your hotel in the accents of Normandy. A with 1\'lontréal, so it is with all thi., land of ubtle charm, this Québec, the Province ju t across your invisible bor- der. Neighbours need 110 passports here. Their money goe further than it does at home. Obviou ly then, it is the place to think of.. when planning your 1940 vacation. This year.. make it a French Canadian holiday in Old Québec! For maps and descriptlv.e literature, apply to your home travel agency, automobile club, Chamber of Commerce, M7 railway. steamship or bus of- fice, or write di reet to TOURIST BUREAU QUEBEC.CRNADR get round to designing a plausible book title, Inakes a good job of ex- plaining the principles of modern functional form and their possible uses in the buildin2" of a more livable ...) society. Excellent illustrations and format. No PLACE LIKE HOME, by Patience, Richard, and J ohn .L hbe. The juve- "'" 1 nile authors of ".l round the \Vorld in Eleven Y cars," now older, give a " shrewd account of their trip to E u- ,,-/;., ,; rope before the war broke out. En- tertaining stuff. Poorly illustrated. .... - OLD VERMONT HOUSES, by Herbert \\Theaton Congdon. Text and over a. .! hundred ingratiating photographs of lli .. '-' '-..). ( ,..:.... wooden, stone, and bnck dwellings, 'f:'t. .:;.'" "':ti meeting houses, and taverns-the "", ,..."L,,:.: , t 1 " , , ff$%l::".;:,:,:,:"",,;,..:,. principal art of 1\ ew England "carved . " In common sense. THE STORY OF FLYING, by i\.rchibald Black. Detailed journalistic history of aeronautics from Daedalus to the stratosphere liner, plus a chapter on the aircraft of the future. Good pic- ".,þ tures. MYS TéR Y AND CRIMé I)EATH CAME DANCING, by Kathleen Moore KnIght. New England salti- ness, supplied by Elisha IVlacomber of Penberthy Island, seasons this tale of sultry Inurder in Panama. Liane Richmond, a young WOlnan who spe- cializes in smoldering, is done in on the night of the Pollera BalI, and Panalna's social boys and girls are in for trouble with the police. Nice, detailed story written with skill and malice. DEADLY Is THE EVIL TONGUE, by Anne Hocking. .L love affair with an <- obstacle-a husband-provides the backbone of this cahn story of how they get rid of their menfolk in dear old England, marred by a tepid, half- hearted investigation into the puz- zling death of Stephen \Vinton. Not mysterious, but should please femin- ine readers. . ATTR. V ACA Cy-2 gentlemen, large rm., t\vin beds; cunt. hot water; fur. heat; young lady roommate. VE. 3328.-A dv. ill t II e Atlanta Cons lit U lion. Sounds most attr. . DEPT. OF UNDERST A TE IENT [Fronz an article on food poisoning in the fourteenth edition of the Britannica] The practice of adding poisonous sub- stances to food merely for the sake of altering color or appearance has nothing to recommend it. for 50 years - an enemy of throat irritation :t:. _. ....,..::1 I" ::, ;\ 'Y" \ iFij"' ;: ' ' d ':'\;"';'/' :. }. it ø rr"'" , :0 ;:"" '_:-::::: :: ;:;::-:::::':.:::::,::::::.::: :.::;.:.ù:':::_:-:'''- :::' ..:.;.. . . . ..JAit/ l, To help. ease and soothe the irritated membranes, gargle with GlYCO-THYMOLINE. This gentle alka- line solution is harrllless and com- forting. Keep a bottle in your medicine cabinet. At all druggists. GLYCO. . - '" -:; .., .....,. I fr ... .. THY MOLINE THE 50 YEAR OLD DEPENDABLE GARGlE LOAN EXHIBITION OF SELF PORTRAITS BAROQUE TO IMPRESSIONISM Until April 30 SCHAEFFER GALLERIES 63 East 57th Street, New York They left today, sir · · · f; for a gay April ' oliday l "" AT THE SDELBCB E ON ATLAl\TIC CITY'S BOARDWALK Newly Decorated Shelburne Grill. Ocean Decks. CALL l'I. Y. OFI. ICE-VANDERBILT 6-2921 PIRIE lA\(' DO ALD Ph 0 t()gl a I) 11 erl-oJ- len. 576 FIFTH AV' 0 -COR 47 TH 5T TEL E P H 0 l\; E BRYAN'l' 9-1074 SIngleness of purpose- MEN ONLY. APRIL 13, 194 0